They don't mess around in school zones, know lots of people who have gotten tickets there. Also look out for the stopped school buses.
Always have WAZE running on your phone even if not using it for directions. It will warn you when you approach a traffic camera, and often when a policeman is lurking by.Ah, good to know! The ticket was in Kirkland actually as I was driving through. Even though it was school zone, there was not a child in sight (likely due to covid). I have gone through that street a million times. I always go extremely slow. It did not have a camera before. they must have added it.
Love the man. Can't believe there are judges like him.I bet you wish you had Judge Caprio:
It's interesting you say that-that was my subjective impression as well. I wonder if the measurements reflect what we heard or if it's some other issue. At normal volumes they sound perfectly neutral but w/ hard rock particularly it became painful at loud volumes.
There are far more very good measuring class D designs like LM3886, Tripath and others. If properly implemented, they can all be competative but that takes hard work and a technical attitude. Seems few can build a livelihood out of that somehow, so I reckon there are more forces at play.It is an odd thing for Emotiva to sell. They add no value after the box and connectors. Maybe that is one reason they have moved on and no longer offer it.
At the high performance end I have a feeling we will be waiting for the nCore patents to expire before we see real competition in class D. They nailed how to do it right, and there hasn’t been much since.
LM3886 is not class D.There are far more very good measuring class D designs like LM3886, Tripath and others.
Yeah, that's something that is still puzzling me.Yeah. About 1Vrms of nice 450kHz sub AM-MW frequency. What a shame the designers cannot make anything better than a dumb simple LC. And this goes to the speaker wire.
Check for class D amplifiers that don't increase distortion in the treble when power increases. It is the direct cause of your observation.Yes it’s interesting. I’ve tried different class D amplifiers and they behave similar with harsh and painful at higher volumes with rock music. Could be due to my Canton SLS 790 since they use a ceramic aluminum tweeter. Maybe a mismatch.
Marketing.What's the difference between a mono amplifier and a monoblock amplifier?
I've heard that if you drive slowly enough you can avoid a speed camera ticket.I've heard that if you drive fast enough you can avoid a speed camera ticket.
I've asked before: why monoblock? Seems redundant to me but some seemed to think it was a stupid question.What's the difference between a mono amplifier and a monoblock amplifier?
Would be interesting to find the first use of the term. I think the first time I heard the term was in relation to something like the Krell KMA-200. I suspect it was chosen to sound big and beefy. But block also emphasises the unitary nature of the design, the manner in which nothing is shared with another component. Really, it is just marketing. Engineers talk of blocks all the time as basic units to build stuff out of. So a monoblock is your basic building block of amplification. They probably came up with the name over a few beers after work.I've asked before: why monoblock? Seems redundant to me but some seemed to think it was a stupid question.
Maybe they were all blockedWould be interesting to find the first use of the term. I think the first time I heard the term was in relation to something like the Krell KMA-200. I suspect it was chosen to sound big and beefy. But block also emphasises the unitary nature of the design, the manner in which nothing is shared with another component. Really, it is just marketing. Engineers talk of blocks all the time as basic units to build stuff out of. So a monoblock is your basic building block of amplification. They probably came up with the name over a few beers after work.
Check for class D amplifiers that don't increase distortion in the treble when power increases. It is the direct cause of your observation.